Fueling 1.5 Million App Downloads a Day, Tapjoy Pushes for Exclusivity With Publishing Program

Tapjoy, the little and increasingly pricey secret that many app developers use to power their way up the charts, said today that it’s launching a “self-publishing” program. Essentially, that means that the company is willing to offer tens of thousands of dollars in free credits in exchange for exclusive distribution rights to new mobile titles.

For background, Tapjoy is a pay-per-install advertising network: developers pay for enough app downloads so they can ideally crack the top of the iOS or Android charts, get visibility in front of consumers and then gain downloads from more valuable, long-term customers. Tapjoy gets these downloads for its advertisers by putting offer walls in hundreds or thousands of apps, which award gamers virtual currency if they download other apps. It usually costs north of $30,000 to break into the top 25, but it varies widely. If an app is good, it will be cheaper. If it’s poorly designed, it will fall off the charts quickly and no amount of spending will save it. The company’s network includes more than 7,500 Android and iOS apps and reaches 200 million customers (as measured by unique device IDs). It says apps that work with it earn more than $35 million a month.

Even though Tapjoy has the largest network, this new self-publishing program is about staying one step ahead and preventing competitors from having access to emerging titles. Other pay-per-install networks are cultivating relationships with rising iOS developers by launching seed funds like W3i.

The three main services of Tapjoy is offering as part of this self-publishing program are:

1) Distribution: Tapjoy will provide the developer credits to its pay-per-action advertising network. They would be worth anywhere from “tens of thousands of dollars” to potentially much more on an ongoing monthly basis. Chief executive Mihir Shah wouldn’t guarantee that the program would offer enough for a developer to break into the top 25. However, anecdotally from other developers, $20,000 to $45,000 seems to be the going rate at the moment so theoretically it could be enough.

2) Monetization solutions: The company will run the virtual currency infrastructure, the offer wall and other kinds of promotional ad units for the games.

3) Other infrastructure or consulting: The company works with more than 10,000 apps across iOS, Android and Facebook, so it has visibility into what practices monetize best for other developers and can offer advice. It can also secure servers or contract with Amazon’s EC2 on behalf of them.

In exchange, Tapjoy is looking for:

Exclusive distribution rights on relevant platforms (which could be iOS, Android or other future app stores). The length of the contract varies; it could be one to three years.

He added, “We want the developer to do what they love to do while we handle the business aspects.”

Shah said the emergence of other competitors wasn’t really affecting the company’s bottom line and that it was eyeing new opportunities with other app stores and markets where Android is quickly gaining share.

“The biggest effects on our business are structural. It’s the adoption worldwide of smartphones and the embrace of app usage,” Shah said. “We’re so ubiquitous at this point that we’ve created a marketplace effect.”

Other third-party developers who use both Tapjoy and its rival Flurry, have told us that both companies have been engaged in a fierce rivalry. In fact, Doug Pepper, who used to sit on the boards of both companies recently left Flurry’s to avoid a conflict of interest.

Shah wouldn’t share specifics on future expansion plans, but hinted that the company is looking at the Windows Phone 7 and Mac app stores, in addition to more obvious candidates like the newly-launched Amazon appstore. Intriguingly, Amazon’s distribution licenses make no mention of in-app payments, which potentially creates a window for third-party monetization solutions like Tapjoy or Rovio Mobile’s Bad Piggy Bank. Shah wouldn’t comment on this.

He also said: “The international footprint of Android is driving some curiously creative and thoughts on our end.” Indeed, low-end Android handsets are quickly grabbing share away from Nokia in China with the help of unofficial app stores like nDuoa and GoAPK.

Subscribe to Adweek

Featured Courses

Search MarketingOptimize your website through SEO, social media, and digital outreachLearn more >Facebook MarketingGet smart about how to use Facebook for businessLearn more >Copywriting for Social MediaMaximize your clicks, shares, retweets, and pinLearn more >Skills in 60: How to Name Your Brand or ProductDevelop a unique name for any brand, product, or businessLearn more >See more Courses >